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#1
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Posted By: Bruce Dorskind
Yankee Stadium memorabilia not selling well |
#2
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Posted By: leon
I don't follow memorabilia like I do cards but this doesn't really surprise me... |
#3
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I guess the rings not selling surprises me, but 400,000 for Molina's homerun??? That's ridiculous to think that would ever bring that. |
#4
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Posted By: Alan U
I wouldn't be surprised if the economy had something to do with it, but it seems like they had some unreasonable expectations for the more recent items, like Molina's HR ball. |
#5
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Posted By: Anthony S.
He's only the 3rd best Molina. |
#6
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Posted By: barrysloate
If your expectations are too high, anything can pass. Why would someone want to pay 400K for Molina's ball? |
#7
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Posted By: Doug
Gurnsey's has had this problem before. They did a large movie memorabilia auction last year (Pugliese Collection, I believe), and they overpriced just about everything. Huge amounts of items didn't sell, and those that did, often had reverse bidding (starting at 10k, dropping to 9.5, then 9, and so on). |
#8
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
It's not like it was the first HR in Yankee history; it was simply the last one hit at one building (which had already been drastically changed in the early 70s). Big freaking deal. |
#9
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Posted By: barrysloate
And the first homer was hit by Babe Ruth, 85 years ago. |
#10
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Posted By: CoreyRS.hanus
I agree with Doug. The economy is the economy and that is something a consigner has no control over. However he does have control over who he selects to auction the material. Based on what I have seen over the years, Gurnsey's is not the place I would go. They do seem to overprice a lot of the material, and at least in years past have exhibited an amateurism that makes them pale in comparison to some of their competitors. I remember attending one of their rock and roll auctions when someone while the auction was in progress walked in claiming he had John Lennon's driver license. Gurnsey's accepted the consignment on the spot (so much for due diligience and consignment deadlines), gave it to the auctioneer who then offered it for sale. Another time at one of their baseball auctions a high-priced lot was not coming close to reaching its reserve. The consigner of the lot was well-known and was in the room. After literally several minutes of the auctioneer pleading with the high bidder to go higher so the lot would reach the reserve, the bidder stood up and asked the auctioneer to clam up. The bidder went on to publicly scold the auctioneer for treating him like an idiot -- that why would he have any motivation to bid higher inasmuch as he was only bidding against himself, and that after the auction he would go to the consigner and attempt to buy it privately. |
#11
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Posted By: barrysloate
There are two basic ways to sell something: by private sale or by auction. |
#12
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Posted By: Rob D.
Auction houses in general -- especially the bigger ones -- need to wake up and realize we're living in a new landscape (and not necessarily the economic one). |
#13
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
I have to laugh at some of the comments here directed towards auction house consignors with delusional values for their cards: have they all ended up on the BST here? Look at the mindest, it's the same: list an item for 2-3x what it's worth (as easily verified by checking out the VCP); hope some poor bastard bites; lower the price once, twice, three times -- and then off to ebay! Everyone pleads for cards and balls, etc. just to be auctioned off with a $1 starting price but the truth is sellers don't want auctions anymore: they want minimum prices met and anything higher is just a bigger score. You wonder why ebay will probably soon go to a solely fixed-price format...well, there's your answer. |
#14
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Posted By: boxingcardman
Plus, that auction was not well-publicized. No one out here heard of it and I did not hear anyone talking about it. |
#15
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Posted By: Tony Galovich
They would be the Last auction House I would consign to |
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